When was kagan confirmed




















Kagan was rumored to be in contention for replacing David Souter in , but that seat went to Sonia Sotomayor. She was the first Justice to be appointed to the court without previous experience as a judge since Justice William Rehnquist. Kagan enjoyed widespread support from members of the Democratic party, which controlled the Senate.

However, many Republicans expressed concern about her nomination, particularly her lack of judicial experience. During her confirmation hearings before the Senate Judiciary Committee , Kagan was questioned about a range of issues, including abortion, gun rights, the Commerce Clause , and military recruiting on campus while she was the dean of Harvard Law School.

In her testimony, Kagan also drew a clear line between her work for the Clinton Administration and her potential seat on the Court. Kagan also advocated judicial restraint.

Supreme Court Nomination List of documents submitted with committee questionnaire, letters sent and received in connection with the nomination, and a photo gallery Senate Judiciary Committee.

C-SPAN video of confirmation hearings, swearing in ceremony and more. Full transcripts of the hearing are available in the CQ Transcriptions database on Lexis. Search for "Kagan". Judiciary Committee vote to send nomination to full Senate.

Senate Vote Summary. S - S March 11, Debate over her nomination and vote : Cong. S - March 19, Barron, Chevron's Nondelegation Doctrine , Sup. New Yorker Magazine, Inc.

Republicans spent the last hours of debate accusing her of being hostile to gun rights, and they have also spent considerable time criticizing her stance in favor of abortion rights. Kagan revealed little about what kind of justice she would be in weeks of private one-on-one meetings with senators and several days of testimony before the Judiciary panel, despite having famously penned a law review article blasting Supreme Court nominees for obfuscating before the Senate.

She dodged questions about her personal beliefs on a host of hot-button issues and declined repeatedly to "grade" Supreme Court rulings. But her public appearances and documents unearthed from her time serving as a Clinton administration lawyer and domestic policy aide painted a portrait of the kind of personality she'll bring to the bench.

She came across as a sharp intellect who enjoys the thrust and parry of legal debate, someone who's willing to throw elbows to make her opinions heard but nonetheless eager to facilitate consensus.

She also showed flashes of a playful, dry wit senators said would serve her well in sometimes tense court deliberations. Kagan will be no stranger to the eight justices she is to join on the Supreme Court, having served as the government's top lawyer arguing cases before them in a post often referred to as the "10th justice.

Kagan's nomination to a seat on the nation's highest court drew relatively little notice this summer, with the public and elected officials preoccupied by bad economic news and the Gulf oil spill, and many lawmakers nervously eyeing the November midterm congressional elections. When sworn in, Kagan will join two other women on the court, Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sotomayor, who was Obama's first nominee.

She served from September to January Not since has the Senate confirmed a Supreme Court nominee without experience as a judge. Woolsey, Rep. Fortney Pete Stark, Rep. Steve Israel, Rep. Ackerman, Rep. Joe Baca, Rep. John Garmendi, Rep. Rush D. Holt, Rep. Dennis Moore, Rep. Carolyn McCarthy, REp. Charles B. Rangel, Rep. Nita M. Lowey, Rep. Joseph Crowley, Rep.

Alcee L. Hastings, Rep. Anthony D. Weiner, Rep. Anna G. Eshoo, Rep. Frank Pallone, Jr. Loretta Sanchez, Rep. Susan A. Davis, Rep.

John B. Larson, Rep. Sam Farr, Rep. John W. Olver, Rep. Jim McDermott, Rep. John Conyers, Jr. Xavier Becerra, Rep. Jay Inslee, Rep. Silvestre Reyes, Rep. Dutch Ruppersberger, Rep. Ciro D. Rodriguez, Rep. Maurice D. Hinchey, Rep. Solomon P. Ortiz, Rep. Chris Van Hollen, Rep. Eliot L. Engel, Rep. Tim Ryan, Rep.

Edward J. Markey, Rep. Rosa L. DeLauro, Rep. Elijah E. Cummings, Rep. Lacy Clay, Rep. Bill Pascrell, Jr. Charles A. Gonzalez, Rep. Moran, Rep. Alan Grayson, Rep. Robert E. Andrews, Rep. Earl Blumenauer, Rep. Jane Harman, Rep. Bob Filner, Rep.

Donald M. Payne, Rep. Chaka Fattah, REp. Carolyn B. Maloney, Rep. Jose E. Serrano, Rep. Linda J. Sanchez, Hon. Pedro R. Pierluisi, Rep. Henry C. Lois Capps, Rep. Steve Cohen, Rep.

Jared Polis, Rep. Mike Thompson, REp. Doris O. Matsui, Rep. Wald , Judge, U. Court of Appeals D. Circuit ret. June 8, - David C. Codosh, University of Utah S. Quinney College of Law; Phillip J. Cardozo School of Law; John M.



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